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Multiple challenges of antibiotic use in a large hospital in Ethiopia - a ward-specific study showing high rates of hospital-acquired infections and ineffective prophylaxis.

Girma GutemaHelle HåkonsenEphrem EngidaworkElse-Lydia Toverud
Published in: BMC health services research (2018)
In the present study from three wards in the largest tertiary teaching hospital in Ethiopia, three out of four patients were prescribed antibiotics, primarily empirically. The mean antibiotic consumption was 81.6 DDD/100BD. Surgical site infections constituted a large burden of the infections treated in the hospital, despite extensive prescribing of prophylaxis. The findings show the need to implement antibiotic stewardship programs in Ethiopian hospitals with focus on rational prescribing, increased sensitivity testing and better procedures to prevent hospital acquired infections.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • adverse drug
  • acute care
  • primary care
  • newly diagnosed
  • ejection fraction
  • end stage renal disease
  • public health
  • risk factors
  • patient reported